2 Or. Tax 520 | Or. T.C. | 1967
Decision for defendant rendered March 14, 1967. This is an appeal from an order of the tax commission denying plaintiff's claim for a property tax exemption.
Plaintiff, a corporation whose stockholders are union members of the Plywood and Veneer Workers Local 2554, owns a business and union hall in Lebanon, Oregon. Plaintiff claims it is a fraternal organization and entitled to an exemption under ORS
Fraternal organizations are defined in ORS
"(1) For the purposes of ORS
307.136 , 'fraternal organization' means a corporation:"(a) Organized as a corporation not for profit under the laws of any state or national government;
"(b) Which is not solely a social club but is established under the lodge system with ritualistic form of work and representative form of government;
"(c) Which regularly engages in or provides financial support for some form of benevolent or charitable activity with the purpose of doing good to others rather than for the convenience of its members;
"(d) No part of the income of which is distributable to its members, directors or officers;
"(e) In which no member, officer, agent or employe is paid, or directly or indirectly receives in the form of salary or other compensation, an amount beyond that which is just and reasonable compensation commonly paid for such services rendered and which has been fixed and approved by *522 the members, directors or other governing body of the corporation; and
"(f) Which is not a college fraternity or sorority.
"(2) For the purposes of ORS
307.136 , 'fraternal organization' includes, but is not limited to, the grand and subordinate lodges of the Masons, the grand and subordinate lodges of the Knights of Pythias, the Knights of Columbus, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the Fraternal Order of Eagles, the Loyal Order of Moose, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Oregon State Grange, the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars."
The issue is whether plaintiff qualifies as a fraternal organization under the above statute and under Lane CountyLabor Temple v. Commission,
However, the court then proceeded to find that the *523
plaintiff was exempt as a fraternal organization because it met all of the qualifications listed in ORS
1. Exemptions from taxation do not originate with the courts — they are privileges accorded as a matter of legislative grace. Keyes v. Chambers et al,
2. Plaintiff cannot prevail herein because it is obvious from the history of the exemption statutes that the legislature did not intend to include labor union halls or labor temple associations as fraternal organizations entitled to the exemption. ORS
The minority report was defeated and the bill *524 passed the House and was signed by the Governor on May 10, 1961.
Another attempt was made in the 1963 legislature when House Bill 1462 was introduced at the request of the Oregon AFL-CIO. This bill proposed to amend ORS
It is apparent that the question of labor temple associations being included with fraternal organizations for property tax exemption was twice presented to the legislature and twice rejected.
3. All real property in this state is subject to taxation unless it is excepted. ORS
"* * * Taxation is, therefore, the rule: exemption, the exception; and nothing can be held to be exempt by implication. * * * Exemption is not a matter of right, but a pure matter of grace; and every person or corporation claiming that his or its property, or any part thereof, is exempt must be able to show some clear constitutional or legislative provision to that effect. * * *"
28 Or. at 196 .
4, 5. Exemption statutes will be construed most *525
strongly against those asking for the exemption. MethodistHomes, Inc. v. Tax Com.,
Moreover, even if the legislature had not considered and rejected the request for exemption, thereby leaving some uncertainty as to legislative intent, the facts in this case still do not show that plaintiff is the type of fraternal organization that the legislature contemplated. In this case, as in the Lane County Labor Temple case, the plaintiff was organized to purchase and operate a building. It is doubtful if the Elks, Masons and the others were initially organized for the purpose of owning and operating a building. The ritual which plaintiff created after the decision in the Lane CountyLabor Temple case was enacted to assist plaintiff in securing a property tax exemption. It is again doubtful if the ritual of the Elks and Masons, for example, was originally created for the purpose of securing a property tax exemption. It is true that *526
a taxpayer has the right to decrease or completely avoid his taxes by whatever means the law permits. "But the question for determination is whether what was done, apart from the tax motive, was the thing which the statute intended." Gregory v.Helvering,
At plaintiff's meetings which follow the union meeting the ritual, according to the evidence, consists of calling the meeting to order, a salute to the flag and the introduction of any new members. A password may or may not have been rendered at the prior union meeting. No initiations are conducted. If this constitutes being established "under the lodge system with ritualistic form of work" then any nonprofit group owning real property anywhere in the state can have a meeting, a password, possibly a song, do some charity, and have their property exempt from real property taxes. This obviously was not the intention of the legislature when it enacted ORS
*527The order of the tax commission is affirmed. No costs.